Charley looked tired. Up and down all night perhaps? 'Then what we have here is a situation where someone comes into the tent in broad daylight and empties God only knows how many packages of the stuff into two soup pots in front of you, Niki, Pix, and the rest of the bunch.'
“Plus a dozen or so crew members who needed to eat early or were waiting for trays. I admit it is impossible.'
“Yet it must have happened that way.'
“We would have noticed, believe me. Even if someone palmed the stuff and dropped it in the soup while we weren't looking, he or she would have to have stirred it to mix it in and then have repeated the whole thing at the other table.”
Charley looked glum. When more than a minute had passed, Faith tentatively asked the question that had been on her mind since he'd told her what had happened.
“Are you going to have to close me down?'
“
“Yes, except this was not a result of the caterer in question's actions. I mean, we're not talking salmonella chicken or spoiled mayonnaise here.'
“Sort of what I said to the Department of Health”
“And they said?'
“They agreed—after a while. But whether the movie people still want you ..
“It would be perfectly understandable if they didn't. I just don't want to be shut down. You can't imagine how grateful I am to you, Charley.' Faith would have thrown her arms around the chief, but he wasn't the hugging kind.
Charley still had the notebook out. He was thinking out loud. 'A fire and food poisoning—all within the same hour. Could be one of those movie people is some sort of lunatic. You ever notice any of them behaving more strangely than the rest?' Charley took it for granted all of them were demented in some respect—otherwise, they wouldn't live in California. Faith had observed this regional chauvinism in Charley, and other Alefordians, on numerous occasions. New York City was the worst. Make no mistake about that, but L.A. was definitely in the running.
“No, I can't say I've seen anyone wandering around talking to lampposts. The only slightly maniacal outburst was an eight-year-old girl's, and she's merely spoiled.' Faith then gave Charley an account of Caresse's temper tantrum, which was accompanied by noises from Amy's room, indicating she was up and ready for company. The first soft babbles became increasingly puzzled syllables, then finally insistent crying as Faith ignored her—hoping to finish the story before tending to her child.
“Get the baby, Faith, before she blows a gasket. I have to check in at the station and see what's going on there before I head over to the Marriott.”
Amy's cries had become one long antiphony.
“But I still have so many questions. At least tell me if the fire was set or an accident.'
“You have questions! Some things never change.' Charley looked more cheerful than he had all morning. 'All right. We don't know if the fire was set or not yet. We don't know why someone wanted to close down the set of A,
She who must be obeyed would soon rocket right out of the crib. Faith called, 'Coming, sweetie. Mommy's coming,' and turned to start up the stairs. 'Thanks, Charley. For everything. And let me know what's happening?'
“Sure, Faith.' Police Chief Maclsaac let himself out the front door and got into the cruiser—if you could call it that, he reflected dismally. He'd bring Patrolman Dale Warren along while he questioned everyone at the Marriott. The kid saw a lot of movies. And he hadn't eaten any soup.
Amy stopped crying the moment her mother entered the room, and
She took the baby into the kitchen and packed some zwieback and other baby goodies into her gargantuan diaper bag. Faith was upset and had to talk to Tom—in person. After bundling Amy into her L. L. Bean Baby Bag, she grabbed her own jacket and headed across the yard and through the ancient cemetery that separated the church from the parsonage.
At least no one had died in the incident, she reflected, looking at the slightly askew slate tombstones with their lugubrious messages from the glorious beyond—such as Daniel Noyes's pithy 1716 epitaph: 'As you were, so was I/God did call and I did dy.' The sun had not managed to pierce the gray cloud cover overhead and the ground was frozen. There hadn't been any snow, but the remnants of last summer's green carpet of grass, so very green in the burial ground, crunched underfoot.
Tom was slightly surprised to see Faith, flushed and obviously agitated, at his office door. She rarely ventured into this part of the church; whether from lack of interest or fear of being added to a committee, he was still not quite sure.
“Is everything all right, honey?' he asked anxiously.
'No,' she replied, peeling off Amy's layers and looking around for a place to deposit her. Tom was not the tidiest person in the world. His' office consisted of a large rolltop desk, several bookcases crammed with books, two wing chairs, one Hitchcock, and piles and piles of papers and more books on the floor, said chairs, and any available surface. A four-drawer file stood to the right of his desk and held church stationery, extra hymnals, and prayer books. 'I know exactly where everything is,' he'd protested to both his wife and the church secretary, earnestly imploring them not to touch a thing. 'I have my own system.”
Faith refrained from her usual comment. Before slumping into one of the wing chairs, she removed a stack of the yellow legal pads he favored when composing his sermons, written in longhand. 'These are my computer,' he often said, wiggling his fingers. Too precious for words, his wife had told him on more than one occasion, and an unlikely affectation for a man whose state-of-the-art high fidelity system required a degree from MIT to operate.
“What's happened?' he said, reaching for the baby, who proceeded to treat his lap as a trampoline, delightedly bobbing up and down in his grip.
“The reason everyone got sick yesterday was a superabundance of Chocolax and some other laxative in the black bean soup.'
“Faith, this is terrible! Are they going to suspend your license?' Tom knew the repercussions almost as well as Faith.
“For the moment, no, and the rumors will die down, I hope,' Faith said in a voice that belied her words. 'But what's got me is, who would do such a thing and why? Was it directed at the film people or me?'
“My guess would be the cast and crew, and perhaps Evelyn O'Clair in particular. You just provided a happy medium.'
“There's something else.... There's no way anyone could have put the stuff in the soup without being seen.”
Faith recounted the timetable, and Tom had to admit he was stumped, too.
“The only thing that makes sense is that the stuff was added to Evelyn's soup and the soup in the tent at different times. I'm convinced the fire was set to get everybody out of the way. But we're right back at who and why again.'
“So, what next? Are you going to get in touch with Alan Morris to see if you still have a job?'
“I have to, although I'm not looking forward to it. Charley said Max wants to start shooting again tomorrow. They kept Evelyn at the Lahey Clinic for observation overnight, but she's all right now. That's another thing I don't